I just bought a Corsair K95 (non-RGB version) keyboard and I'm wondering what it would take to get Binder to work with it? It has 18 individual G-keys, and three Macro pallets that work with those 18 keys for more keys.
Thanks in advance.
Posted 15 January 2015 - 11:48 PM
I just bought a Corsair K95 (non-RGB version) keyboard and I'm wondering what it would take to get Binder to work with it? It has 18 individual G-keys, and three Macro pallets that work with those 18 keys for more keys.
Thanks in advance.
Posted 15 January 2015 - 11:52 PM
Posted 16 January 2015 - 12:07 AM
https://www.dropbox....gfiles.zip?dl=0
Tell me if that works please. Sorry it took so long, had to download dropbox lol
Posted 16 January 2015 - 08:04 AM
Not sure if you saw what I posted on FFOChat last night, but none of those files have the right info in it. The right file should look something like the one posted here:
http://forums.window...port/?hl=binder
Do you have to enable the G-keys first? I.e. toggle them on with some kind of mode key? If so, make sure they're working first, then run BinderFinder again and press all those keys, then close it. Then zip up the files again (or find the right one yourself, if you think you have it).
Again, just for the record, it should look something like this (only different values, but the "Data: ..." parts are important):
\\?\HID#VID_195D&PID_2039&MI_02&Col02#7&101ff523&0&0001#{4d1e55b2-f16f-11cf-88cb-001111000030} Type: HID Vendor ID: 195D Product ID: 2039 Usage Page: FF01 Usage: FF00 Input Reports: 1 ID: 02 [ V 56 Bits ] Feat. Reports: 0 Data: 0208195D20390101 Data: 0208195D20390100 Data: 0208195D20390201 Data: 0208195D20390200 Data: 0208195D20390301 Data: 0208195D20390300 Data: 0208195D20390401 Data: 0208195D20390400 Data: 0208195D20390501 Data: 0208195D20390500 Data: 0208195D20390601 Data: 0208195D20390600 Data: 0208195D20390701 Data: 0208195D20390700 Data: 0208195D20390801 Data: 0208195D20390800 Data: 0208195D20390901 Data: 0208195D20390900 Data: 0208195D20390A01 Data: 0208195D20390A00 Data: 0208195D20390B01 Data: 0208195D20390B00 Data: 0208195D20390C01 Data: 0208195D20390C00 Data: 0208195D20390D01 Data: 0208195D20390D00 Data: 0208195D20390E01 Data: 0208195D20390E00 Data: 0208195D20390F01 Data: 0208195D20390F00 Data: 0208195D20391001 Data: 0208195D20391000 Data: 0208195D20391101 Data: 0208195D20391100 Data: 0208195D20391201 Data: 0208195D20391200 Data: 0208195D20391301 Data: 0208195D20391300 Data: 0208195D20391401 Data: 0208195D20391400 Data: 0208195D20391501 Data: 0208195D20391500
Posted 17 January 2015 - 07:50 AM
I can see the keyboard in the log. The spec sheet I have for the K95 Vengeance says it has VID: 1B1C and PID: 1B08, and two devices show up with those IDs, but it doesn't appear to report the macro keys like any of the other keyboards we support. The first device has an empty log, and for the second, it just looks like you pressed Tab 9 times, then pressed Shift once and then held Shift for like 5 seconds. Could you try assigning something to the G-keys in the K95's software, just to see if anything changes? Perhaps F1-F12, and then 1-6.
Posted 17 January 2015 - 04:14 PM
I can see the keyboard in the log. The spec sheet I have for the K95 Vengeance says it has VID: 1B1C and PID: 1B08, and two devices show up with those IDs, but it doesn't appear to report the macro keys like any of the other keyboards we support. The first device has an empty log, and for the second, it just looks like you pressed Tab 9 times, then pressed Shift once and then held Shift for like 5 seconds. Could you try assigning something to the G-keys in the K95's software, just to see if anything changes? Perhaps F1-F12, and then 1-6.
Just my luck, lol the one keyboard I buy doesn't seem to work like the other keyboards you support X_X
I set G1-12 to F1-12, and G13-18 to 1-6 and nothing still appears in the program when I do , but it does display output if I press the F1-F12 and 1-6 buttons.
HOWEVER, if I set the keyboard to "Hardware Playback" and save the profile to the keyboard directly, data DOES appear on the screen when I press the G-keys after they're binded to stuff.
These are the log files I got:
https://www.dropbox....B0039].zip?dl=0
Posted 17 January 2015 - 10:56 PM
Hmm, unfortunately it's showing up like normal key presses, which means we can't tell if you're pressing the G key bound to F1 or the actual F1 key. I was hoping we could do something like what we did with the Razer Naga (which is a mouse that pretends to have a keyboard hooked to it), and filter out the macro keys from the standard keys, but they all look like they're coming from the same device.
If you can figure out some way to get the macro keys (and only the macro keys) to show up in device[0001003F].log then we can probably make it work, but it doesn't look good right now. Sorry.
Posted 18 January 2015 - 03:15 AM
What exactly are we looking for in this keyboard with this program? Corsair has a forum, wondering if turn to that forum to get the data you need to work support into binder. I dunno, I kinda bought this keyboard because I didn't like the razer one I had, which has G-keys, but some of the regular keys started registering duplicate keypresses on certain letters, making it hard to type or put in passwords. I heard corsair made good keyboards so I picked up a relatively cheap K95 because my razer was a month out of warranty and I heard they probably wouldn't do anything for me despite the keyboard being only a year old.
Posted 18 January 2015 - 08:25 AM
What the program you're using does is log all input events from any keyboard, mouse, or generic human interface device (HID). We're basically trying to reverse engineer how the macro keys are delivered from the device to the PC, so that we can read them directly.
On most gaming keyboards the keyboard identifies itself to Windows as a so-called "composite device", which consists of a standard keyboard for the main 104 keys, and a second generic HID which includes all of the non-standard features of the keyboard like the macro keys and backlight control. That second HID basically just streams raw data to the accompanying profiler software which executes your programmed macros. These kinds of devices are easiest to deal with because we can just read the data stream ourselves, and tell people to use a blank profile for FFXI. On a few devices (like the Razer Naga) instead of a generic HID, the macro keys are reported as an extra keyboard. For these devices we have to do some extra work. First, a set of known keys needs to be programmed for each macro key, we have to register to receive the raw input from Windows and watch for these known keys coming from a device with the correct ID, and then we have to block only the events from this device from reaching FFXI, without affecting any of the other devices, so that the rest of the standard keys still work.
The problem is with the K95, it looks like everything is reported as if it's coming from one standard keyboard device, and there's no way for us to tell the macro key presses apart from the other keys. If I had physical access to one of these keyboards I might be able to figure out how to make it work, but even then I'm not sure. As it stands I don't see any way to do it.
Also, just to avoid wasting your time, it's unlikely you'll get any help with this from Corsair. They probably wouldn't appreciate us reverse engineering their hardware. It's not illegal, but don't expect them to help.
Posted 19 January 2015 - 12:19 AM
Bleh, that sucks, but I got a work around (not the best work around, but it still works in game) I'll share with anyone else who happens to buy this keyboard.
I had to download Auto HotKey (AHK) and use a certain profile on my keyboard (in hardware mode, very important).
https://gist.github....8daa8f7df68a577
Download AHK, and use the script on top, the AHK script, and edit the commands for the G keys (which use F1+1, F2+1, etc. as hot keys) while using the aforementioned profile in HARDWARE mode (won't work in software mode at all, it took me forever to figure that out).
So I got G1 doing my TP set, G2 doing my idle set, etc. in gearswap.
It does this by typing out the command in chat and typing enter. It happens pretty fast, but it's not ideal, I realize, but it's workable.
Posted 19 January 2015 - 02:15 AM
bind ^!#f1 ...; // G1 bind ^!#f2 ...; // G2 bind ^!#f3 ...; // G3 bind ^!#f4 ...; // G4 bind ^!#f5 ...; // G5 bind ^!#f6 ...; // G6 bind ^!#f7 ...; // G7 bind ^!#f8 ...; // G8 bind ^!#f9 ...; // G9 bind ^!#f10 ...; // G10 bind ^!#f11 ...; // G11 bind ^!#f12 ...; // G12 bind ^!@#f1 ...; // G13 bind ^!@#f2 ...; // G14 bind ^!@#f3 ...; // G15 bind ^!@#f4 ...; // G16 bind ^!@#f5 ...; // G17 bind ^!@#f6 ...; // G18
Posted 19 January 2015 - 02:27 AM
the way your keyboard works is
the 18 g keys can each have 3 sets of key strings saved to them
i.e.
M1-G1 = hold(shift),a,b,c,d,release(shift) -- prints ABCD
M2-G1 = a,b,c,d --prints abcd
M3-G1 = hold(shift),top_1,top_2,top_3,top_4,release(shift) -- prints !@#$
there basicaly keyboard macros(not sure if it will record mouse movements but i bet not)
you set the recording with MR
the exact procedure im not sure of
Posted 19 January 2015 - 02:42 AM
Why not just configure some hard to reach key combos, and bind them in Windower directly. It's still not as ideal as using Binder, since you are eating up some of the bind space, but it should work. I would probably do something like this:
G1: Ctrl + Alt + Apps + F1
G2: Ctrl + Alt + Apps + F2
G3: Ctrl + Alt + Apps + F3
G4: Ctrl + Alt + Apps + F4
G5: Ctrl + Alt + Apps + F5
G6: Ctrl + Alt + Apps + F6
G7: Ctrl + Alt + Apps + F7
G8: Ctrl + Alt + Apps + F8
G9: Ctrl + Alt + Apps + F9
G10: Ctrl + Alt + Apps + F10
G11: Ctrl + Alt + Apps + F11
G12: Ctrl + Alt + Apps + F12
G13: Ctrl + Alt + Win + Apps + F1
G14: Ctrl + Alt + Win + Apps + F2
G15: Ctrl + Alt + Win + Apps + F3
G16: Ctrl + Alt + Win + Apps + F4
G17: Ctrl + Alt + Win + Apps + F5
G18: Ctrl + Alt + Win + Apps + F6
Then bind them in Windower using this script:bind ^!#f1 ...; // G1 bind ^!#f2 ...; // G2 bind ^!#f3 ...; // G3 bind ^!#f4 ...; // G4 bind ^!#f5 ...; // G5 bind ^!#f6 ...; // G6 bind ^!#f7 ...; // G7 bind ^!#f8 ...; // G8 bind ^!#f9 ...; // G9 bind ^!#f10 ...; // G10 bind ^!#f11 ...; // G11 bind ^!#f12 ...; // G12 bind ^!@#f1 ...; // G13 bind ^!@#f2 ...; // G14 bind ^!@#f3 ...; // G15 bind ^!@#f4 ...; // G16 bind ^!@#f5 ...; // G17 bind ^!@#f6 ...; // G18
So I write that into a text file or something? Where do I put the file? I've never had to run a script like that, so I don't know how, or is that a lua script? Sorry I'm stupid about this ._.
Posted 19 January 2015 - 07:38 AM
You can just add that to your init.txt file if you want. You will need to replace all of the "..." parts with the actual command you want to run. So, if you set your keyboard up the way I said, and add
bind ^!#f1 input /ma "Cure" <t>;
to your init.txt file then pressing G1 will cast Cure.
I should also note that you won't get the multi-boxing support that Binder provides. If you need this you will need to use the Send addon.
Posted 19 January 2015 - 07:38 AM
It goes into Windower/scripts and it's not Lua, so just call it binds.txt or something. Then call it from init.txt, just add this line at any point in the init.txt file:
exec binds.txt
Posted 19 January 2015 - 05:08 PM
Got it all figured out, thank you so much, it works.
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